The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 20, 1982-Page 3 TO STAY CLEAR IN DISCRIMINA TION CASES Bell seeks to ease GSL rules WASHINGTON (AP)- Education Secretary People j Terrel Bell said yesterday that colleges should be free from the reach of bureaucratic "tyrants" if the and go only federal aid their students receive is in the form bureaucr of guaranteed loans. Bell defended the Reagan administration's tS ' decision to reverse a ten-year-old federal policy and allow colleges that discriminate to participate in the guaranteed student loan program. THE ACTION stemmed from a still unresolved lawsuit against the government brought by Grove thousands of City College, a private school in Pennsylvania that hassles," sai accepts no other form of federal aid and refuses to that comes on sign a form that it has complied with civil rights laws. "THAT'S N Bell told the House subcommittee on postsecondary and go, and education that Grove City- was "a splendid little and there ar school" that has never discriminated but wants to be tyrants," sa) free from federal surveillance and regulation. higher educa "It isn't just a trifling matter to comply. There are that intimida Jury selection n various positions come and there are many ats that behave like tyran- - Terrel Bell Secretary of Education dollars involved in it, as well as the d Bell. "It's the far out, zealous enforcer to the campus." WHAT happens. Administrations come people in various positions come and go e many bureaucrats that behave like id the former Utah commissioner of tion. "I've been a recipient of some of tion and I know about it." But Democrats on the panel sharply questioned the administration's commitment to civil rights in rever- sing a policy instituted during the Nixon ad- ministration. Rep. Ted Weiss (D-N.Y.) read an excerpt from a July 21, 1981, memo by Clarence Thomas, then Bell's assistant secretary for civil rights, that said the department should hold off changing the policy because of "serious constitutional infirmities." WEISS ALSO read excerpts from a 1976 opinion by the Ford administration's attorney general, Edward Levi, that the loans did subject an institution to obeying the civil rights statutes. Bell claimed former Attorney General Robert Kennedy held the opposite view, as does Attorney General William French Smith. Bell claimed that Grove City will "be forced to discriminate against poor kids" if it can only admit those who do not need guaranteed loans. bogs down in Leo Kelly trial By GEORGE ADAMS As jury selection stalled yesterday in the trial of Leo Kelly, a former Univer- sity student accused of murdering two fellow students last April, Defense At- torney William Waterman motioned for a change of venue, an attempt to move the trial outside of Washtenaw County. The Washtenaw County Circuit Court exhausted its first panel of more than 130 prospective jurors early yesterday without successfully forming a jury. Before the second panel was sworn in, Waterman made a motion to move the trial's location. "CONSIDERING the questions and their (the juror's) responses," Waterman told presiding Judge Ross Campbell, "I think it's clear they're all exposed to pre-trial publicity....This community is tied too closely to this case," he said. Waterman also said that people seem to make a connection between Kelly's case and the trial of John Hinckley, who is accused of shooting President Reagan. Both the defendants are using an insanity defense. "The whole Hinckley trial has just heightened people's awareness to the defense of insanity," he said. "Again, too many opinions have been formed." PROSECUTING attorney Lynwood Noah conceded that "more people than normal have shown an opinion on the question of insanity," although he did, not echo Waterman's desire to move the trial. Campbell denied the change of venue motion, saying "There does seem to be a greater degree of debate over the legitimacy of the defense (of insanity) growing out of the Hinckley trail and the assassination attempts on the Pope." "But, he continued, "debate over the legitimacy of the law doesn't necesitate or suggest the need for a change of venue." CAMPBELL SAID that publicity concerning the case is now over a year old, and that the Hinckley trial has received national attention, soa change of venue would not correct that problem of exposure. He denied the motion, however, "without prejudice toward renewal," meaning the motion could be brought up again. A second panel of 24 potential jurors was sworn in yesterday after the original panel was exhausted, but proceedings dragged on through the af- ternoon without achieving successful selection of the 14-member jury. Jury selection will continue today. Toward the end of the day's proceedings, Noah entered ,a perem- ptory challenge (a motion to remove a potential juror without cause) against one of the prospective jurors, a young black woman. See SELECTION, Page 11 Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL A sweet pair Jed and Nancy Fritzemeiir sit in front of the-Sweet Chalet, yesterday and quietly enjoy their cones while the rest of Ann Arbor sweats profusely. LANSING (UPI) - TI layed for a day yesterda executive budget redu lawmakers would not cuts. A joint meeting of propriations Committe William Milliken's rescheduled for 3 p.m. t Rep. Gary Owen, (D State budget eut order delayed 'he Milliken administration de- the House committee, said the majority of his timetable for work on the 1E ay plans to release a $50 million colleagues felt "a better distribution" could be found The $50 million spendin ction order when it appeared for making the budget reductions in the final quarter Milliken's plan to balan support planned education of the 1981-82 fiscal year. Already approved are a o Budget Director Gerald Miller, however, insisted porary income tax increas the House and Senate Ap- there are only "minor points" to be resolved and said as well as an earlier $308r es, which must approve Gov. he expects the order to be approved today. Miller Owen indicated he and+ cuts, was cancelled and said the size of reductions in school and college reduce the education cuts today. appropriations is not a major sticking point. specific programs such as t )-Ypsilanti) vice-chairman of Meanwhile, there was growing debate over the poison control centers. .82-83 budget. g cut is the final step in ce the current budget. ne percentage point tem- e and a cigarette tax hike, million spending cut. other' lawmakers want to and instead slash more the consumers council and